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Archive for the ‘a different world’ Category

Oct-8-2009

pause: united states reaction to guinea

all throughout 2009, i’ve blogged about the abuse of women and children via the sex slave trade. similar attitudes are on brazen display on this under reported story from guinea.

i will pause from blogging my usual fare the next few days to give it the spotlight it needs:

Clinton: Guinea violence a “vile violation” of rights

Mark Leon Goldberg - October 8, 2009 – 12:01 pm

Hillary Clinton says that the United States government is formulating a response the recent flare up of violence in Guinea in which government forces shot and raped hundreds of demonstrators gathered at a soccer stadium.

Last month, Clinton presided over a Security Council session that passed a resolution classifying rape as a tactic of war. Should the United States seek to take action through the UN, this may be the first opportunity to invoke the resolution at the council.   State Department spokesperson Ian Kelley suggested as much in recent comments to the press.  From All Africa:

It is precisely because of these horrific events of September 28 that Secretary Clinton went to the Security Council last week and called for urgent action to protect women and girls,” whom he described as “war’s most violated and vulnerable victims.” “The U.N. and the international community must act now to end this crisis,” [said Kelley]

These kinds of resolutions may seem like only  symbolic excersizes at the time, but they do lay the foundation for the kind of consensus upon which the council relies to take swift action.

Posted under a different world
Oct-6-2009

pause: horror in guinea

all throughout 2009, i’ve blogged about the abuse of women and children via the sex slave trade. similar attitudes are on brazen display on this under reported story from guinea.

i will pause from blogging my usual fare the next few days to give it the spotlight it needs:

In a Guinea Seized by Violence, Women Are Prey

By ADAM NOSSITER
Published: October 5, 2009

CONAKRY, Guinea — Cellphone snapshots, ugly and hard to refute, are circulating here and feeding rage: they show that women were the particular targets of the Guinean soldiers who suppressed a political demonstration at a stadium here last week, with victims and witnesses describing rapes, beatings and acts of intentional humiliation.

“I can’t sleep at night, after what I saw,” said one middle-aged woman from an established family here, who said she had been beaten and sexually molested. “And I am afraid. I saw lots of women raped, and lots of dead.”

One photograph shows a naked woman lying on muddy ground, her legs up in the air, a man in military fatigues in front of her. In a second picture a soldier in a red beret is pulling the clothes off a distraught-looking woman half-lying, half-sitting on muddy ground. In a third a mostly nude woman lying on the ground is pulling on her trousers.

The cellphone pictures are circulating anonymously, but multiple witnesses corroborated the events depicted.

The attacks were part of a violent outburst on Sept. 28 in which soldiers shot and killed dozens of unarmed demonstrators at the main stadium here, where perhaps 50,000 had assembled. Local human rights organizations say at least 157 were killed; the government puts the figure at 56.

But even more than the shootings, the attacks on women — horrific anywhere, but viewed with particular revulsion in Muslim countries like this one — appear to have traumatized the citizenry and hardened the opposition’s determination to force out the leader of the military junta, Capt. Moussa Dadis Camara.

Diplomats said the violence had irreversibly undermined Mr. Camara’s standing with other countries.

If internal opposition continues to grow, Captain Camara may be forced either to leave power or to tighten his grip with an even more authoritarian government.

Bernard Kouchner, the foreign minister of France, the former colonial power here, said his country could no longer work with Captain Camara, and urged “international intervention.”

The exact number of women who were abused is not known. Because of the shame associated with sexual violence in this West African country, victims are reluctant to speak, and local doctors refuse to do so. Victims who told of the attacks would not provide their names because they were afraid of retribution.

But the witnesses were adamant. “I affirm, in categorical fashion, that women were raped, not just one woman,” said Mamadou Mouctar Diallo, 34, an opposition leader who said he had been severely beaten himself. “I saw many rapes.”

Three women who said they had been attacked described their ordeal in an interview this past weekend. “We didn’t know the soldiers were going to harm us,” said the middle-aged woman who said she could not sleep at night. She spoke slowly in a darkened room, seated on a bed with two other women. They were in a villa in a district at the edge of the capital here.

“We heard gunfire,” she said. “I tried to flee.” With weapons going off, suddenly “it was like a henhouse.”

She ran, but a soldier barred the way.

“He hit me,” she said. “And he tore my clothes off. He ripped my clothes off with his hands.”

Then, she said, “he put his hand inside me.” The soldier hit her on the head with his rifle, requiring stitches, she said. She also had large welts from the beating.

“We are traumatized,” she said slowly, looking down.

Mr. Diallo said he saw at least 10 women raped at the stadium.

Describing one such assault, he said: “I saw a woman who was stripped naked. They ripped off, they tore off her clothes. They surrounded her. They made her lie down. They lifted up her feet, and one of the soldiers advanced. They took turns.”

One woman interviewed at the suburban villa here described how a soldier had ripped her robe off with a knife. She had a large cut on her backside, where a soldier had stabbed her with his knife, and deep bruises on her shoulders.

The third woman said she had been whipped by a soldier. “When I went out, I saw one of the soldiers lying on top of a woman,” she said. “A lot of women were raped.”

Corroboration of the attacks came from at least one foreign aid organization in the Guinean capital. Jerome Basset of the Conakry mission for Doctors Without Borders said his team had treated three rape victims and three other victims of sexual violence in the hours after the demonstration.

Brutal repression of antigovernment demonstrators has occurred in Guinea before, notably in 2007, when security forces shot several hundred people demonstrating against the repressive regime of Lansana Conté, who preceded Captain Camara.

Rape is a fairly common tool of military repression in Africa, but large-scale violence against women has not been a previous government tactic here. “This time, a new stage has been reached,” said Sidya Touré, a former prime minister who was also beaten at the stadium and said he had witnessed brutalities there. “Women as battlefield targets. We could never have imagined that.”

“Where could people get the idea to start raping women in broad daylight?” Mr. Touré asked, in an interview at his home here. “It’s so contrary to our culture. To molest women using rifle barrels. … ”

Captain Camara, asked in his office at the sprawling military camp here last week whether rapes had occurred, responded: “I wasn’t at the stadium. These are things people have told me.” He has repeatedly disclaimed responsibility for the killings at the stadium, blaming opposition figures instead.

He reiterated these disclaimers in an interview broadcast Sunday on Radio France Internationale, even as Mr. Kouchner, the French foreign minister, said in a radio interview that “group massacres aren’t internal matters.”

Opposition figures here said that they were discussing further ways of countering the government, and that they would not be stopped by last week’s bloody repression.

A diplomat here, who declined to be identified because he was not authorized to speak on the subject, said Saturday that “the writing is on the wall for the junta, certainly vis-à-vis the international community, and I hope vis-à-vis the local community.”

Meanwhile, the sexual violence, along with the number of people unaccounted for after last week’s crackdown, continues to trouble many here.

“They especially tore into the women,” said another former prime minister, François Lonsény Fall, who was also at the stadium. “They were seeking to humiliate them.”

“We want a force of intervention to protect us from the ferocity of the Guinean Army,” Mr. Fall said.

Posted under a different world
Jul-31-2009

pause: really dirty little secret

i’ve been pausing and blogging about child slavery as i have been meditating on the birth of my daughter, zoe and the world that i am bringing her into.

in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such gifts of life and joy. such grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

i came across this disturbing article via my friend dave park about the realities of child porn…the trafficking of the most innocent and most vulnerable.

i used to teach my youth group girls that boys are bad! except for dad…and dad is only a maybe. some of the parents were not happy about what i was proposing but i had seen my share of crappy dads. i am sad to present an even darker reality. i have never been more depressed to be correct.

buckle up before reading…and have a barf bag at your side

Child porn’s dirty secret: Dads often behind lens

By ELAINE SILVESTRINI(tampa bay tribune)

esilvestrini@tampatrib.com

TAMPA – He told his young daughter he was going to make her a model.

He shot pictures of her in skimpier and skimpier outfits.

And when she slept, the Tampa man photographed himself molesting her.

He created a Web site, charging strangers to view graphic photos of his daughter. Pedophiles could write in and say what they wanted to see her wearing.

The man was discovered when investigators searching his child-pornography collection noticed that sheets in some of the pictures matched the sheets on his bed.

They also saw explicit pictures of a young girl being molested. Investigators recognized her from family pictures.

The case was not unusual, authorities say.

That’s because when children are victims of pornography, the photographers and abusers often are their fathers, stepfathers and grandfathers.

“Some of the darkest stuff you see is produced in people’s basements,” said Stacy Arruda, who supervises the Tampa FBI’s computer crimes unit. “The most common that we see in this area … is parents and stepparents abusing their own children.”

Nearly twice as many children in a nationwide child-porn database were photographed by their parents as were victims of online enticement. The number victimized by parents was nearly seven times that of children exploited by strangers.

There was the case of a Tampa man traced by a Pennsylvania state trooper investigating child pornography on the Internet. When investigators searched his home, the man’s 12-year-old daughter was there. Later, as agents reviewed pornographic images on the man’s computer, there she was posed on a bed when she was 7.

‘Our secret’

Several years ago, prosecutors say, the parents of a 14-year-old girl established a Web site with graphic photos of their daughter. The mother bought the girl provocative clothing; the father took the pictures and molested her. When investigators searched the Tampa-area home, the girl’s closet was full of garter belts, stockings and platform shoes.

Then there was the man who took pornographic pictures of his 9-year-old great-granddaughter.

“Make a pretty face,” he would tell her.

“Don’t tell anybody,” he would say afterward. “It will be our secret.”

The Bradenton man was prosecuted after his great-granddaughter told her grandmother about the photo sessions. Investigators reviewing photographs discovered the man’s 7-year-old great-grandson also was a victim.

When investigators asked the girl why she took off her clothes for her great-grandfather, she said it was because you’re supposed to do what your grandparents tell you.

These cases are a dirty secret, and not only in families.

Media reports almost always leave out the relationship between perpetrator and victim in order to protect the child’s identity. Most media organizations, including The Tampa Tribune, have policies that bar publishing the identities of sexual assault victims, especially children.

For that reason, the suspects’ names also are being withheld in this story.

“Most people would not suspect that a girl’s own father would do it,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Colleen Murphy-Davis, who prosecutes such cases.

“It’s really shocking,” said another Tampa federal prosecutor, Amanda Kaiser. “When you first start, you think, ‘How could parents do that? How could they sell their children?’ … It’s just sickening.”

Some fathers are seeking financial gain, Kaiser said. Others want sexual gratification.

“I think they’re sociopaths,” she said. “I don’t think they have any conscience. I think they lack empathy, and to them, children are just a commodity to be used.”

Since Arruda began her job 31/2 years ago, she estimates the office has investigated about 100 such cases. Technology costs are falling, making exploitation easier.

“Anybody with a digital camera can take pictures of whatever they want,” she said.

Sometimes male relatives trade photographs with other pedophiles online, Arruda said.

Fathers can get away with being abusers because they can exploit the bond of trust, authorities say. They groom their children to accept what is happening and have the leverage to keep them quiet.

Sometimes, the mothers know.

“You’ve got one of two situations,” Murphy-Davis said. “The mother knows about it, so they figure it’s fruitless to tell mom, or they’ve told her in the past and she’s like, ‘You’re lying.’ Or there’s just too much shame with going to the mother and saying, ‘This is what the man you love is doing to me.’”

Sometimes, the mother supports the abusing father at the expense of the child. One Tampa mother wanted to kick her teenage daughter out of the house and make her live with her grandmother so the father could remain there while his case was pending. The judge was so disgusted he ordered the father jailed. The mother’s letter in her husband’s defense angered the sentencing judge.

Prison sentences

The charge of producing child pornography carries a prison sentence of up to 30 years; possessing child porn carries up to 10 years; and transporting or shipping child porn brings a minimum mandatory sentence of five years and as long as 20 years.

The Tampa man who created a Web site with graphic photos of his daughter pleaded guilty to all three of those charges and was sentenced to 45 years in federal prison.

“What law enforcement tends to be seeing is that the children who are being used to produce these images are kids being abused in bedrooms and basements and living rooms across the United States and elsewhere,” said Michelle Collins, executive director of the Exploited Child Division of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

The division is a clearinghouse for law enforcement to share information when children depicted in pornography are identified. Collins said this helps prevent defendants from arguing that the children in their pornography collections aren’t real.

Since the program started in 2003, more than 2,300 children have been identified in pornographic pictures and videos, Collins said.

Of those, 27 percent were photographed by parents or stepparents; 24 percent by neighbors or close family friends; and 10 percent by other relatives.

Just 4 percent were photographed by strangers. The rest were photographed by coaches, babysitters, their parents’ boyfriends and girlfriends, or by themselves, often after being enticed by someone they met online.

“The individuals who sexually molest are most likely to molest children who they’re a trusted adult toward,” Collins said. “That’s why there is such a low disclosure rate of children who are abused.”

Reporter Elaine Silvestrini can be reached at (813) 259-7837.

Posted under a different world
Jun-25-2009

pause: video update from speak up


i’ve been pausing and blogging about child slavery as i have been meditating on the birth of my daughter, zoe and the world that i am bringing her into.

in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such gifts of life and joy. such grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

Speak Up asked my friend jonathan wu to film and create videos to help promote their ongoing efforts in Bangkok. these are a few of them….


if you are interested in joining me in giving…..

1) Send checks payable to SPEAK UP

Speak Up
PO Box 5595
Pasadena, CA 91117

2) If you’re on Facebook, go to http://apps.facebook.com/causes/252674 and donate through
Speak Up’s Causes page. Again, by April 14th if possible.

Speak Up is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, making your donation tax-deductible.

i am interested in matching your donation to double your giving power. please touch bases with me on that.

Posted under a different world
May-28-2009

the parable of adoption

there have been a few themes i’ve been trying to plant in people’s heads at vision church…that the reality of god will be brought about and seen in the actions of mostly ordinary people…everyday folks following the lead of god’s spirit that won’t draw much attention. as opposed to the loud, bright, booming spectacles and programs(and people) that we, the church have been enamored(addicted)with. we see in matthew’s gospel, joseph quietly follows the direction of god…and while mary usually gets the credit, joseph’s humble obedience is a forgotten gamechanger. what he does is he adopts jesus as his own….check the genealogy.

adoption appeals to believers because it tells the our story of faith in a tangible way. no blah blah blah or theological debating or wrangling(which has not done a good job of showing jesus at all)….but adoption communicates the love we’ve experienced when god takes us in and we become his children with all the rights and privileges…no class system…no awkward distinctions…a full relationship via the power of love. imagine if adoption was the reaction we had to social issues like abortion, poverty or aids instead of endless debates…..gamechanger.

our friends have been taking kids in for a few years now…and everytime i tell them what a great thing they are doing, they ask me what i mean. they are puzzled thinking what they do is something commonplace. i’ve lost track of how many kids they have opened their homes to. i joke that once believers start adopting, they have like 9. so its zero or a ton! currently they have 3 with one of their own on the way. without fanfare, they mentioned that their kids were on tv…cbs wanted to do a story on their youngest girls. so i looked it up.

Watch CBS Videos Online

i am in awe.

Posted under a different world
May-15-2009

pause….a different world in india

there are some stories that get ignored because they do not catch the public’s fancy. perhaps we want them to stay hidden so we can go about our lives.

and the new cycle is so short that after a few hours, stories can become old news. as jay said, we can go from swine flu one minute, forget that and talk about topless photos of miss california.

here’s one story that i hope to keep in our psyche for a longer cycle.

More than 1M child prostitutes in India

NEW DELHI, India (CNN) — Around 1.2 million children are believed to be involved in prostitution in India, the country’s federal police said Monday.

Ashwani Kumar, who heads the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), told a seminar on human trafficking, that India occupied a “unique position” as what he called a source, transit nation and destination of this trade.

India’s home secretary Madhukar Gupta remarked that at least 100 million people were involved in human trafficking in India.

“The number of trafficked persons is difficult to determine due to the secrecy and clandestine nature of the crime.

“However, studies and surveys sponsored by the ministry of women and child development estimate that there are about three million prostitutes in the country, of which an estimated 40 percent are children,” a CBI statement said.

Prostitution in pilgrim towns, exploitation through sex tourism and pedophilia are some of some of the “alarming trends” that have emerged in recent years in India, it noted.

Authorities believe 90 percent of human trafficking in India is “intra-country.”

*******

i’ve been pausing and blogging about child slavery as i have been meditating on the imminent birth of my baby girl and the world that i am bringing her into.

in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such gifts of life and joy. such grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

if you are interested in joining me in giving…..

1) Send checks payable to SPEAK UP

Speak Up
PO Box 5595
Pasadena, CA 91117

2) If you’re on Facebook, go to http://apps.facebook.com/causes/252674 and donate through
Speak Up’s Causes page. Again, by April 14th if possible.

Speak Up is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, making your donation tax-deductible.

i am interested in matching your donation to double your giving power. please touch bases with me on that.

Posted under a different world
Apr-20-2009

pause….interlude

i’ve been blogging about my friend’s work, making films to combat human trafficking. he left this week to do a short piece in bankok. There is no fiction
that will truly fit the situation. he’ll be documenting every detail, every conversation he has access to too.

last month he wrote me this:

Human trafficking – it’s something you’ve probably heard or read about. This practice affects millions worldwide and is, unfortunately, thriving.

The reality of it: a fifteen-year-old responding to a job offer to work at a restaurant in Bangkok instead trafficked to Malaysia and forced into prostitution. A ten-year-old in New Delhi made to beg for money from morning till night and given only one meal a day. Two Indonesian women hired by Long Island residents to be housekeepers subjected to beatings and confinement.*

It’s atrocities like these that lead my friend Troy to form Speak Up, a non-profit dedicated to fighting these injustices and to providing opportunities for those who are vulnerable. It’s a relatively new organization, and I’ve had the chance to watch it grow and gain in momentum.

Speak Up has invited me to travel as part of a small team to Bangkok, Thailand in April. I’ll be filming and creating videos to help promote their ongoing efforts, and I also hope to make a short documentary about Speak Up’s work and capture a bit of life in Bangkok.

My trip will last 10 days, and I’ll need your prayers and encouragement.”


if you are the praying type, please lift these up in your hearts:

- protection for our group
- recovery from being under the weather so I can be 100% for this trip
- productive time for my friend Troy as he meets with government officials and contacts to set up programs
- that our electronic equipment (laptops, camera) would function properly and wouldn’t get stolen!
- sensitivity to God and what he wants to accomplish

if you are the giving type, please check out:

speak up for the poor

and on facebook…..here.

more updates and pauses to come…..

Posted under a different world
Apr-12-2009

pause…easter day

periodically, i stop and rest. and give pause. rest, reflection and refreshment.

sometimes there is something bigger than me that forces me to stop. 2 things this week:

i’ve been reflecting on the upcoming birth of my baby girl….in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such a gift. such a grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

once again, here is the video for speak up:

Speak Up has asked my friend jonathan wu to film and create videos to help promote their ongoing efforts. he also hopes to make a short documentary about Speak Up’s work and capture a bit of life in Bangkok. his trip will last 10 days, and he’s seeking financial support. If you’re inclined to give, his goal is to raise $1,500 to cover travel, housing and equipment costs. There are two ways you can donate:

1) Send a check payable to SPEAK UP by April 14th to:

Speak Up
PO Box 5595
Pasadena, CA 91117
(write Jonathan Wu in the memo section)

2) If you’re on Facebook, go to http://apps.facebook.com/causes/252674 and donate through
Speak Up’s Causes page. Again, by April 14th if possible.

Speak Up is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, making your donation tax-deductible. Please send me an email and let me know if you’ve donated, as this will help keep track of the amount being raised. also, i am interested in matching your donation to double your giving power. please touch bases with me on that.

second……

holy week draws to a close as easter is here….the highest holy days in the christian faith when we focus on the last week of jesus’ life before his death and resurrection. we start off with his jubilant entry into jerusalem, celebrate with the last supper and communion before we descend into his betrayal, trial, torture, crucifixion and death. usually, stories that end in death….end. but the story was not over yet. this was only friday…..sunday is here.

for the past week, I posted a video a day to retell the story. these videos were made by leo chen, a bsg fan, videographer and movie maker in my church….of leo-graphy, my friend leo fame.

here are the outakes….laughter and joy that embraces the new life of the day!:

Posted under a different world, vision
Apr-11-2009

pause…day eight

periodically, i stop and rest. and give pause. rest, reflection and refreshment.

sometimes there is something bigger than me that forces me to stop. 2 things this week:

i’ve been reflecting on the upcoming birth of my baby girl….in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such a gift. such a grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

Speak Up has asked my friend jonathan wu to film and create videos to help promote their ongoing efforts. he also hopes to make a short documentary about Speak Up’s work and capture a bit of life in Bangkok. his trip will last 10 days, and he’s seeking financial support. If you’re inclined to give, his goal is to raise $1,500 to cover travel, housing and equipment costs. There are two ways you can donate:

1) Send a check payable to SPEAK UP by April 14th to:

Speak Up
PO Box 5595
Pasadena, CA 91117
(write Jonathan Wu in the memo section)

2) If you’re on Facebook, go to http://apps.facebook.com/causes/252674 and donate through
Speak Up’s Causes page. Again, by April 14th if possible.

Speak Up is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, making your donation tax-deductible. Please send me an email and let me know if you’ve donated, as this will help keep track of the amount being raised. also, i am interested in matching your donation to double your giving power. please touch bases with me on that.

second……

holy week draws to a close as easter morn dawns….the highest holy days in the christian faith when we focus on the last week of jesus’ life before his death and resurrection. we start off with his jubilant entry into jerusalem, celebrate with the last supper and communion before we descend into his betrayal, trial, torture, crucifixion and death. usually, stories that end in death….end. but the story was not over yet. this was only friday…..sunday is here.

for the past week, I posted a video a day to retell the story. these videos were made by leo chen, a bsg fan, videographer and movie maker in my church….of leo-graphy, my friend leo fame.

Posted under a different world, vision
Apr-10-2009

pause…day seven

periodically, i stop and rest. and give pause. rest, reflection and refreshment.

sometimes there is something bigger than me that forces me to stop. 2 things this week:

i’ve been reflecting on the upcoming birth of my baby girl….in my faith, we give thanksgiving offerings as a sign of gratitude for such a gift. such a grace. i’ve decided to give to speak up, an international human rights organization committed to the eradication of modern slavery and human trafficking. this is a gift for a better world for my girl…and a lot of other baby girls.

Speak Up has asked my friend jonathan wu to film and create videos to help promote their ongoing efforts. he also hopes to make a short documentary about Speak Up’s work and capture a bit of life in Bangkok. his trip will last 10 days, and he’s seeking financial support. If you’re inclined to give, his goal is to raise $1,500 to cover travel, housing and equipment costs. There are two ways you can donate:

1) Send a check payable to SPEAK UP by April 14th to:

Speak Up
PO Box 5595
Pasadena, CA 91117
(write Jonathan Wu in the memo section)

2) If you’re on Facebook, go to http://apps.facebook.com/causes/252674 and donate through
Speak Up’s Causes page. Again, by April 14th if possible.

Speak Up is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, making your donation tax-deductible. Please send me an email and let me know if you’ve donated, as this will help keep track of the amount being raised. also, i am interested in matching your donation to double your giving power. please touch bases with me on that.

second……

we’re entering holy week….the highest holy days in the christian faith when we focus on the last week of jesus’ life before his death and resurrection. we start off with his jubilant entry into jerusalem, celebrate with the last supper and communion before we descend into his betrayal, trial, torture, crucifixion and death. usually, stories that end in death….end. but the story was not over yet. this was only friday…..sunday was coming.

for the next week, i’ll be posting a video a day to retell the story. these videos were made by leo chen, a bsg fan, videographer and movie maker in my church….of leo-graphy, my friend leo fame.

Posted under a different world, vision